244 . ;1t ; 1nJ ., :' , ... <t.>x' X,',!, .' w fti<i' :. .' "'. ì:i ð.{; . j:rs . t ,{<.Jt t .< l' '- ,. ..- f wj , .;> , ,T ,. MR. WILLOWBY'S CHRISTMAS TREE by Robert Barry. Picturef, in two colors by the author. $2.50 THE LAMB AND THE CHILD by Dean Frye. Pictures in three colors by Roger Duvoisin. $2.75 WHAT DOES IT TAKE TO ENCHANT A CHILD? (OR A PARENT?) A CAPITAL SHIP or THE WALLOPING WINDOW- BLIND by Charles E. Carry!. Pictures in three colors by Paul Galdone. $2.75 .... :1 DAME WIGGINS OF LEE AND HER SEVEN WONDERFUL CATS edited .:,', r ,:." .00..:.:. f with additional " . . . " verses by John Ruskin, LL.D. Illustrated in two colors by Robert Y"' }'.' '::, :" Broomfield. $2.75 > -c.. ' .;' , \ 'J'" < ,'<-:;"':" , : " ;\=": " '. '\ $ .: ;;'"'::' t ... ,.' .B.JRÞY:,. , ' " WÞTCtl ^ I ' ,.l.::-" ! : Y l,. ! "^->... 'C ! . r ! ,'. f 17' I >Ø----:;-;: i .,.:t: ;4Pf , :er . ", ^ 'h'0.J'ii v,- ,<\:. s. v " .."".-. ,. " .... 'r r :: j :'< 1 ..}j : i .a BIRD WATCHERS AND BIRD FEEDERS by Glenn O. Blough. Pictures in three colors by Jeanne Bendick. $2.95 PARIS IN THE RAIN \'lITH JF AN AND JACQUELINE by Thea Bergere Pictures in tlupe colors by Richard Bergere. $2.50 /.-/" ). ;Com of Horses c.-...., M ^aC'A'::'t, ... $"" r ..$Y'i(/., { l' r' . Ä ;.' ø <0 . . {. r.' .: ./j ,; ^ ! ,{ :. OIL JEYl"ftS' øt""' 1'" SOO'1 --'.,tt JEWELS FOR A CROWN: The Story of the Chagall Windows by Miriam Freund, Ph.D. Foreword by Rene d'Harnoncourt, Director, Museum of Modern Art, New York. 13 six-color plates. $4.95 THE COMPLETE BOOK OF HORSES AND PONIES by Mar- garet Cabell Self. Illus- trated with line draw- ings by R. W. Mutch and with photographs. $5.95 McGraw-HiII/ Whittlesey House Jamaica was quickly put down by the English governor, Edward Eyre, and was followed by a month of ruthless reprisals, including mass ex- ecutions, hut-burnings, floggings, and torture. George Gordon, a mulatto opponent of Governor Eyre's in the legislature, was found guilty, In a farcical trial, of inspiring the upris- ing, and was hanged. The resulting controversy divided British opinion down the middle, and a JamaIca Committee of Parliamentary radicals attempted for years, without success, to bring Eyre and his lieutenants to trial for their crimes, particularly the murder of Gordon. Mr. Semmel tells this sad, nasty story beautifully, con- cluding that if the efforts of the J a- maica Committee failed, they never- theless helped to educate British public opinion, making the future Commonwealth possible. GUERRILLA, by Charles \V Thayer (HarpLf & Row). Mr. Thaver, West Point graduate, ex-cavalrv- man, veteran of service with Tito's Partisans, career dIplomat, and au- thor, shares the view of other mili- tary experts that the next few wars, like the past few wars, are likely to be irregular. In this lively, knowl- edgeable study, he consider<; almost all the guerrilla actions of the past two decades, searching for useful theoretical maxims but keeping his eye always on the significant factual detail. (His brief critique of our Bay of Pigs defeat is dazzling.) He thinks that the United States is beginning to get the hang of irregular war- he's surprisingly optimistic, for in- stance, about the military outlook in South Vietnam-but he wishes we understood that its essence is more political than military. Thayer rec- ommends that we train many more special forces-guerrillas, that is- and that We md.ke "political and social terrain" the main subject in their curriculum, ahead of par- achuting, bridge-blowing, knife- fighting, and other purely technical skills. GEORGE C. MARSHALL: EDUCATION "<' OF A GENERAL, 1880-1939, by Forrest C. Pogue (Viking). A splen- did heginning to the authorized biography of General Marshall. Two additional volumes are planned, pointing to the remarkable fact that the General's most Important work was In 12 rge part stilI ahead of him when he was fifty-nine and this book ends. Mr. Pogue writes care- fully and well, and by the time NOVEMDER 'b. '9 b.3 FOUR CHEERS FOR MERLE MILLER'S* NEW NOVEL a y in latß sept emher *author of A Gay and Melancholy Sound 1 JAMES LEO HERLIHY HThis is as true, as important, as absorbing as any novel I've read in years. It seems to me that anyone who finds our world to be a funny and sad and very frightening place will be crazy about it n 2 GERALD GREEN ((Love, Merle Miller seems to be saying, can be destructive and ugly. He suggests there are other palliatives for the ailments of the human condition - intelligence, cour- age, simple affections. Such a view will sound like heresy to the all-for-Iove writers and playwrights.. On the other hand, it gives Miller a distinction which makes his novels provocative and moral in a fine, sensible manner. n 3 P AXTONDA VIS Merle Miller's mastery of both fictional skills and a point of view that ìs his own is first rate. It is an unsettling novel to read, but no less telling for that. 4 NA THANIEL BENCHLEY ..tIt's well worth reading, if you don't mind find- ing out a few things about yourself you d never admitted before." A William SlQane Associates book At all bookstores, $4.50 MORROW ... 51 "The Queen of Suspense'- Charlone Armstrono ' . " '.. : \. f; ':..' ,.;'. ;.. : . 'C > , 'C" c;=;. . .. . ::.. 'X.: ..,.i.':' ,J r ' ".,, . i' W "'" ....:' ^"-c.' . ..s. ..,. , :, ..... > ''',,=:.z.:.. '.;: ,. ' '. ".: . . is at the very top of her form in her terrifying new novel Ihe Wilch's House '0 . . ): > ,<': :./V : . By the author of ^. A Little Less Than Kind $3.95 at all bookstores COWARD-McCANN, INC. "\: < ;:. ,0", .:::'"